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Sheer’s PR Bulletin

The Reviews Are In - Apple's iPad is a Winner

Sheer Print Solutions through its business relationship with Apple has already secured 10 Apple iPads for its Customer Reward Program.

 Starting April 1st 2010 Sheer Print Solutions, a leader in the field of Print, Promotion and Multi media packaging solutions, will be offering it’s clientele free iPads to all managers and production personnel placing orders totaling $10,000 and more in print. To sweeten  the deal they are also rewarding the same premium gift to clients referring others who purchase the same dollar amounts. 

 Sheer Print Solutions is a NYC based print solutions company providing its expertise and broad range of services to companies in the tri-state area. They excel in quality digital print, color offset printing, custom packaging and multi media presentation.

 iPad Reviews Are In.

Get Yours Today!

Walter S. Mossberg, Wall Street Journal:

My verdict is that, while it has compromises and drawbacks, the iPad can indeed replace a laptop for most data communication, content consumption and even limited content creation, a lot of the time. But it all depends on how you use your computer. If you’re mainly a Web surfer, note-taker, social-net-worker and e-mailer, and a consumer of photos, videos, books, periodicals and music—this could be for you.

The iPad is thinner and lighter than any net-book or laptop I’ve seen. It weighs just 1.5 pounds, and its aluminum and glass body is a mere half-inch thick. It boasts a big, bright color 9.7-inch screen that occupies most of the front. As on all Apple portable devices, the battery is sealed and non replaceable. It has a decent speaker, and even a tiny microphone.

Andy Ihnatko,  Chicago Sun – Times:

It’s a computer that many people have been wanting for years: a slim, ten-hour computer that can hold every document, book, movie, CD, email, picture, or other scrap of data they’re ever likely to want to have at hand; with a huge library of apps that will ultimately allow it to fulfill nearly any function; and which nonetheless covers the dull compulsories of computing (Mail, the web, and Microsoft Office-style apps) so well that there will be many situations in which this 1.5-pound slate can handily take the place of a laptop bag filled with hardware and accessories.

Edward C. Baig, USA TODAY

For more than a decade, nobody, not even a deep-pocketed company like Microsoft, has successfully cracked the tablet market. Apple, based on my tests over several days, is likely to be the first. Back in 2001, Gates predicted tablets would be the most popular form of PCs sold in America within five years. That obviously didn't come to pass. Apple's roots with the tablet form of computing date at least to its ill-fated Newton, an early 1990s personal digital assistant pushed by then-CEO John Sculley and later killed by Steve Jobs.